Once there was a little
red hen. She lived in a little red henhouse, safe and sound,
with a little blue door and windows all around. She was a happy
hen. Every day she searched for grain with a peck, peck, peck
and a cluck, cluck, cluck. But then a sly young fox and his
mother moved into a nearby den. The sly fox was always hungry.
He licked his lips when he grain with a peck, peck, peck and a
cluck, cluck, cluck. And then the sly fox tried to catch the
little red hen. He plotted and planned, again and again. But the
little rend hen was clever. She always got away, with a peck,
peck, peck and a cluck, cluck, cluck. But then the sly fox
thought up a very sly plan.

"Mother, boil some water in a pan," he said. "I'll
bring home supper tonight."

Then he crept over to the little red henhouse.
And he waited until at last the little red hen came out to
search for grain with a peck, peck, peck and a cluck, cluck,
cluck. Quick as a flash, the sly fox slipped into the henhouse.
And he waited until the little red hen came hurrying home. As
soon as she saw the fox, she flew up to the rafters. "You can't
catch me now!" she laughed, with a peck, peck, peck and a cluck,
cluck, cluck.

"All part of my plan," smiled the fox on the
ground. And slowly he started to chase his tail, round and round
and round and round, faster and raster…until the little red hen
up in the rafters grew dizzy.

"Oh!" she clucked. "My poor head's spinning. I'm
all in a tizzy." And she dropped down- plop!- straight into the
fox's sack. "Ha!" laughed the fox. And then the fox slung the
sack over his shoulder and set off for home with the little red
hen. After a while, he stopped for a rest. The sun was warm and
soon he was snoozing. "Now's my chance," whispered the little
red hen, and out she crept without a peck, peck, peck or a cluck,
cluck, cluck. Quickly she rolled some large stones into the sack
and tied a knot at the top. Then she ran all the way home and
didn't stop till she was safe in her little red henhouse. The
fox woke up and went on his way, hungry for his supper.

"This hen is heavy!" he said to himself, licking
his lips.

"She'll make a good meal."

"Is the pot boiling, Mother?" he called at the
den. "Look who I've got! It's the little red hen."

"Throw her in, son," said his mother.

"She'll make a nice snack."

So the sly fox opened up the sack. Into the
boiling water crashed the stones with a SPLASH!

And that was the end of the sly fox and his
mother. And the little red hen lived happily ever after in her
little red henhouse, searching for grain with a peck, peck, peck
and a cluck, cluck, cluck.